Poem 660 – The Heat of Our Desires

What is it that makes you think
that you can wave our flag,
and stand on behalf of us,
and shout angrily in our name?

What is it that makes you think
that we need protecting from
young children and families
who’ve fled from foreign lands?

Does it make you feel big to send
the fearful to hide in their rooms
for safety, when they came
looking for refuge here?

But even as I type
I find that I must pause,
realise my frailties,
and look beyond the waves.

Underneath perhaps the same
uncertainties play out,
as old securities
are lost and all’s at sea.

O, still, small voice of calm,
If only we could reach
beyond the rhetoric
of populist and paper.

Forgive our foolish ways.

On Friday I cycled through protests at our local asylum seeker hotel. I found myself feeling angry at what was going on, angry at the impact this would be having on the people I know there. This poem started as an angry response at those who didn’t take time to think about the humanity of those they were targeting, but was I guilty of becoming what I was accusing them of?
(17.08.25)

© Ben Quant 2025
Photo by balesstudio on Unsplash

Poem 174 – Fusion Cooking

Ingredients:
blend together
two unrelated
cuisines or musical
languages

Outcome:
a fusion dish
of novel taste
an auditory
revelation

Ingredients:
two particles
accelerated
at speed into
a forced collision

Outcome:
explosive wave
of energy
reveals sub-
atomic secrets

Ingredients:
grab unrelated
ideas and hurl
together hard
to see what happens

Outcome:
metaphorical
generation
conceives surprising
ideas and insights

Ingredients:
a man, a woman
heat up their hormones
stir DNA
and leave to sit

Outcome:
new life erupts
through pain and joy
familiar yet
distinctly different

But still…
we build
our walls
close down
the channels
shut down
surprise
take cover
behind
our slogans
fearful
of what
might be
and be
discovered

This started life as a poem about poems and metaphors for World Poetry Day, but finished up as something quite different as I combined not just this and other interests of mine whilst reflecting on a local hotel housing asylum seekers.
(23.03.23)

© Ben Quant 2023
Photo by John Legrand on Unsplash